Newspapers / Daily Herald (Roanoke Rapids, … / June 8, 1933, edition 1 / Page 4
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BASCOES SUFFER DEFEAT Trueworths Deal First Defeat To Fast City League Team By Score 13 to 5 TWO PITCHERS The Trueworths stepped out Saturday with the honor of giving the Bascoes their first setback by slugging out a 13-5 victory in a slugfest on Simmons field, the second game of the double header bill. Both teams used two pitchers with the Trueworths hurlers show ing more effect. Finch, Bascoe twirler, was driven from the mound in the fourth after giving up five hits. Birdsong finished the game but he also was hit hard, the True worths taking him for ten safe bingles. Searcy started on the mound for the winners and went good ’til the fourth after a barrage of hits drove him out. Crowder went, the rest of the route in fine style. The Bascoes tallied in the first when Allsbrook walked, Birdsong got on by an error and Finch brought them home with a single. Two runs were accounted for in the third. Everette singled, Ryals tallied Everette with his two bag gen, then Dick Lee doubled scor ing Ryals. The other Bascoe runs came in the fifth stanza. Birdsong got first by Love’s error, Ryals toucher first, by a wild throw and E. Lee scored Birdsong by singl ing. The Trueworths tallied two markers in the second frame. But ler’s two-bagger and Coburn’s bingle scored Butler, then J. Brown doubled to bring Coburn home. N. Taylor hit a double in the open ing of the fourth, Love tripled to tally Taylor and Gerkins singled scoring Love. Butler touched first by a wild pitch, J. Brown singled and Searc-y scored runners with a safe blow. Two runs for the Trueworths came home in the sixth. J. Brown first up, singled, Pridgen walked, and N. Taylor’s ba,se knock ac counted for the runs. In the seventh inning Love walk ed, Gerkins and Butler singled and J. Brown doubled to tally three runs. The other run was in the eighth frame. Crowder’s bingle was muffled and an error with keen base running brought him home. | tsox score: Trueworths ab. r. h. e. po. a. N. Taylor, ss._4 110 0 N. Taylor, ss. __4 110 0 1 L. Taylor, 2b. —5 0 10 12 Crowder, cf-p. __5 110 3 6 Love, 3b. -4 2 1 2 3 4 Gerkins, rf.-4 2 3 0 1 0 Butler, If.-3 3 2 0 1 0 Coburn, c.-1 110 3 0 J. Brown, lb._4 2 4 0 8 0 Searcy, cf-p._4 1110 3 Pridgen, c._2 0 0 0 5 1 Vaughan, rf.-1 0 0 0 0 0 37 13 15 27 17 3 Bascoes ab. r. h. e. po. a. Allsbrook, 2b._4 1 0 0 3 0 Everette, rf._5 1 1 0 2 0 Birdsong, 3b._5 2 0 1 0 6 Ryals, If. -4 0 1 0 2 1 Finch, cf-p._2 110 12 D. Lee, ss-3b._5 0 3 1 4 1 Mills, c._ 4 0 2 1 6 2 Lyles, lb. _4 0 0 0 4 0 Massey, ss._3 0 2 1 1 0 E. Lee,_5 0 10 12 41 5 11 24 14 4 Score by innings: Trueworths_020 502 310—13 Bascoes _202 010 000— 6 Summary: Runs batted in: Finch Finch Still Leads On Batting Average City League Teams Listed below is the batting aver age of twelve leading city league hitters participating in as many as three games. Vester Finch still leads the league at a .616 pace with Shelly Butler on his heels. Jessie Brown, and Wilbur Out land were players boosting their average considerably the past week, with the Tabs advancing in league averages to one game be hind the Bascoes. Big Twelve ab. h. pet. Finch_13 8 .616 S. Butler_12 6 .500 Coburn _ 7 3 .429 Ryals _15 6 .402 J. Brown_13 5 .385 Outland _13 5 .385 Warren_12 4 .333 Love _12 4 .333 Birdsong _19 6 .318 Garris _11 3 .273 Allsbrook_12 3 .250 F'. Vaughan-12 3 .250 Teams Batting Average^ Trueworths_.330 Bascoes _ .315 Tabs _ .243 Kilo-Swats_, .190 League Standing Trueworths_ .750 Tabs _ .667 Trueworths_.500 Kilo-Swats--- .000 WOMBLE MAKING GOOD Leads Frosh Baseball Team At University of N. C. Last Season Brilliant Future Jimmy Womble, formerly with the local high school baseball club, led the Freshman team at the University of North Carolina this season. Tommy Irwin, brilliant shortstop and Cleveland recruit, hit at a fast clip of .451 in eigh teen games to take the spotlight. Womble was kept out of the first three games because of spring football and later he was kept off the line-up because of a leg in jury. However, Jimmy played in two thirds of the games and made a record that will give him a good chance to make the varsity next year. Carolina fans seemed to like Womble’s style of play and gave the small first baseman a big hand. The college paper, “The Tar Heel,” predicted that Womble would play the initial sac next year and Brandt, this year’s var sity first baseman would be trans fered to an outfield post. Tommy Irwin will probably play short and Phipps will then battle for the hot corner berth. Next year Carolina will have a good chance to pluck another con ference title with good players to fill the places of the departing , Seniors. 2, D. Lee 2, E. Lee, Coburn, J. Brown 4, Love 2, Gerkins, Searcy 2, N. Taylor 2, Crowder. Two base hits: Ryals, D. Lee 2, N. Taylor, Butler, J. Brown 2. Three base hits: Love. Left on bases: Trueworths 7, Bascoes 10. Base on balls: off Searcy 1, off Crowder 1, off Finch 1, off Birdsong 2. Struck out: by Seacry 3, by Crow der 5, by Finch 3, by Birdsong 3. Hits: off Searcy 5 in four innings, off Crawder 6 in five innings, off Finch 5 in 3 1-2 innings, off Bird song 10 in 5 1-2 innings. Umpires: Bray and Collins. Time: 3:30. TABS LOSE TO SLAGLES Virginia Team Proves To Be Too Much For City Team In Sunday Game SCORE 6 TO 0 The Slagles Lake nine seemed to be too much for the Tabs last Sunday and the locals took a 6 to 0 trouncing. Up until the sixth stanza the game was a real hurl ing duel between Finch and B. Slagle, but the Lake club cinched the close affair by pushing over two tallies in the seventh and eighth rounds. The game as a whole was good and it did not turn out that a jubilee of errors caused the scoring; instead, the Slagle club just seemed to have on their hitting habit and outhil the visitors. Acree relieved Finch in the eighth, but the opposing batsmen scored twice on a walk, a fielders choice, and three flies B. Slagle, hurling for Slagle; Lake, held the Tabs down in gooc fashion, limiting them to seven scattered singles. Finch gave up six singles and one Ruthian, and Acree held the opposing sluggers hitless. Slagles scored first in the second frame when Goodman singl ed and came home when H. King hit his four bagger. In the sev enth Finch weakened; passing the second batter up, hitting the next batter, and then allowing a single that brought in the two runs. In seven innings Finch distributed seven hits, four base on balls, and hit one batter; he received fair support, his backers making only 2 errors. B. Slagle remained on the hiil the entire game, giving up only two passes and whiffing eight. Allsbrook and W. Dickens were the big noises at bat for the Tabs, gathering a duet of singles to hit at a .500 pace. (Jutland, Speight, and Garris each plucked a bingle to make up for the clubs seven hits. II. King was Slagles best of fense, getting a homer and a sing le; Longmire was next with two one baggers. Box score: Tabs ab. r. h. e. po. a. Allsbrook, 2b._4 0 2 1 0 5 Outland, c, _4 0 1110 W. Dickens, If._4 0 2 0 2 0 Ryals, rf.-3 0 0 0 0 0 0 Birdsong, ss.-3 0 0 0 3 3 Speight, lb.-3 0 1 0 12 0 Garris, 3b._3 0 10 12 Sullivan, cf._3 0 0 0 0 2 Pinch, p. -3 0 0 0 2 0 Acree, p._0 0 0 0 0 0 30 0 7 2 21 12 Slagles (ab. r. h. e. po. a. McGee, cf._4 0 0 0 1 1 Slagle, ss-3 110 0 5 Longmire, 2b._3 0 2 0 3 1 Branch, c._4 0 118 0 Riley, 3b.-4 0 0 0 0 2 G. King, rf._2 0 0 0 0 0 Goodwin, lb._2 2 0 0 10 0 H. King, If.-4 2 10 10 B. Slagle, p.-3 12 0 18 Poole, rf._2 0 0 0 0 0 31 6 7 1 24 17 Score by innings: Tabs _000 000 000—0 Slagles _020 000 220—6 Summary: Runs batted in: H. King 2, Branch 2, McGee, Slagle. Home runs: H. King. Left on bases Tabs 11, Slagles 7. Base on balls: off Finch 5, of Acree 1, off Slagle 2. Struck out: by Finch 1, by Slagle 8, by Acree none. Hits: off Finch seven in seven innings, off Slagle, seven in nine innings, off Acree none in one inning. Hit by Pitcher: Longmire. Time: ip. e HOYLE SETS NEW RECORD High School Coach Set Many New Records During Last Three Years Here Highly Successful Long will be the days before anyone equals the record of vic tories and championships that has been set by Cranford Hoyle who came to the local high school in the fall of 1930 to take charge of the athletic teams. Hoyle, former Guilford College all State guard in 1928, finished his third year of coaching here when the baseball season closed a few days ago. The Yellow Jackets rated about fourth in northeastern conference athletics in 1930 which consisted of eight strong high school clubs throughout eastern Carolina, tak ing a small squad of boys he somehow managed to whip into shape one of the strongest combi nations in the conference, winning nine of the eleven games they par ticipated in, and taking second place in conference rating. Came basketball, but as usual a weak team as well as material, but the first year of baseball saw around seventeen games played and only three defeats, two losses were by college nines, capturing the N. E. baseball conference crown and going to the semi-finals in state Class B baseball elimina tions. That wound up his first year of tutoring. When football rolled around a gain, quite a large squad reported and the N. E. Conference football championship was his award, out of eleven games the Jackets won nine, licking the Tarboro team twice in order to be awarded the title. Basketball was more successful in his second year, winning five out of twelve games played, and Vie second year baseball even Class A teams refused to play the locals, twenty of twenty-one games were victories, also the Use This Laxative made from plants Thedford’s Black-Draught is made from plants that grow in the ground, like the garden vegetables you eat at every meal. NATURE has put into these plants an active medicine that stimulates the bowels to act — just as Nature put the ma terials that sustain your body into the vegetable foods you eat. In Black-Draught you have a natu ral laxative, free from synthetic drugs. Its us_ does not make you have to depend on cathartic chemical drugs to get the bowels to act daily. Now you can get Black-Draught in the form of a SYRUP, for Children. Dr. W. L. Davis Eye Specialist Will make his next trip here Friday, June 16, at Cullom’s, Sat. June 17 at Hodges. See him a bout your Eyes. second successive N. E. Conference baseball crown, and State Class B. Title. And the past year’s record is just as successful. Football pro teges listed sixty-six, six com plete teams. The Jackets turned in the best record in the state, placed Newton left end, on the all state high team, and W. Dickens was placed on the second eleven at the quarter-back post, besides four honorable mentions. Their re cord was nine victories and a 0-0 game the only mar in their years work. Basketball under Tom Cheek, was better than previous teams in a number of seasons, winning six and dropping seven games. A round eighteen men made up the squad. Baseball under Hoyle this sea son saw twelve games played and three defeats, among their vic tories were Carolina Frosh and Oak Ridge Cadets, going to the finals in the state Class B race, losing their state title to Mount Airy 4-2, whom they licked the previous year 9-6. As a whole Hoyle is a great coach. BASCOES MEET KILO-SWATS Saturday afternoon at 3:30 the Bascoes will battle it out with the Kilo-Swats. Starkes will probably start on the mound for latter. The Bascoes have three good hurlers in Finch, Birdsong and Everette and it is unknown as to which one will get the call. William Bucholz of Chicago tes tified in his divorce suit that his wife charged him 25 cents for breakfast, 50 cents for dinner, $1.50 a week for laundry, 25 cents a night for bed, and a penny for a toothpick. Eyes Examined and Glasses | Fitted. Office near Roses 10c I store. Up stairs. Hours 9 to 12 and 1 to 5. In every day except Mondays. Dr. E. D. Harbour Optometrist '■ Roanoke Rapids, N. C. WOMEN: watch your BOWELS What should women do to keep their bowels moving freely? A doctor should know the answer. That is why pure Syrup Pepsin is so good for women. It just suits their delicate organism. It is the prescription of an old family doctor who has treated thousands of women patients, and who made a special study of bowel troubles. It is fine for children, too. They love its taste. Let them have it every time their tongues are coated or their skin is sallow. Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is made from fresh laxative herbs, pure pepsin and other harm less ingredients. When you’ve a sick headache, can’t eat, are bilious or sluggish; and at the times when you are most apt to be constipated, take a little of this famous prescription (all drug stores keep it ready in big bottles), and you'll know why Dr. Caldwell’s SVrup Pepsin 1b the favorite laxative of over a million women! ) Da. W. B. Caldwell's SYRUP PEPSIN A Doctor* Famity LaxmHm
Daily Herald (Roanoke Rapids, N.C.)
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June 8, 1933, edition 1
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